At the request of the URENCO Corporation, the National Security Archive has removed the image of the cascades of gas centrifuges that first appeared with this posting. The image depicted part of the interior of URENCO's uranium enrichment plant in Amelmo, the Netherlands. Having found the image on the International Atomic Energy Agency's Image Bank, the Archive's staff assumed that it was in the public domain, not least because it has been widely used in publications over the years. As it turns out, URENCO claims a proprietary right to the image. The IAEA has also since removed it from its Image Bank at URENCO's request. URENCO rejected the Archive's subsequent request for permission to use the image on the grounds that the corporate Security Office objected.

Washington, D.C., July 23, 2012 – The possibility that highly motivated countries, such as Iran in today's environment, could secretly build gas centrifuge plants to produce highly enriched uranium was
foreshadowed over fifty years ago by senior officials at the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and its contractors. They perceived that countries determined
to acquire a nuclear weapons capability could secretly build gas centrifuge facilities to enrich uranium, although it required solving complex technical
problems. A recently declassified Union Carbide Nuclear Company report, published for the first time today by the National Security Archive and the Nuclear
Proliferation International History Project, declared that "in general, it would not be too difficult to build a relatively small clandestine gas
centrifuge plant capable of producing sufficient enriched uranium for a small number of nuclear weapons."

AEC contractor Union Carbide found that even a relatively underdeveloped country could covertly develop a centrifuge plant for a nuclear weapons program,
although to do so in a shorter time frame it would need assistance from other countries with more experience in the technology. This is what later happened
with Pakistan, which used Dutch-German-British technology stolen by A.Q. Khan, and with Iran, whose Pakistan-assisted centrifuge program remained largely
secret until 2002.[1]

Some of the highlights of today's publication:

An early CIA report [document 1] on the Soviet gas centrifuge project based on an interview with a returned German prisoner-of-war.

An AEC study [document 6] which found that the gas centrifuge method posed a somewhat greater proliferation risk compared to the "plutonium reactor
route" because it was a "slightly more attractive" method of producing fissile materials. According to the study, while reactors had a "proven" track
record as a source of fissionable material, they required more specialized equipment, more labor power, were difficult to hide, and required more uranium,
among other considerations.

According to the Union Carbide study [document 4] "Class X" highly industrial countries with up-to-date educational systems, such as Germany or
Sweden, would need about 5 years to get to the point where they could produce HEU with a gas centrifuge. Class "Y" intermediate countries with "limited
internal industrial activity," such as Israel or Brazil, would require about 6.5 years to reach the point where they could produce nuclear weapons with the
help of gas centrifuges. "Class Z" non-industrial countries with low technological levels, such as Cuba or Egypt, would take about 8 years. They would,
however, need the assistance of a "Class X" country and would have difficulty building a completely clandestine plant."

AEC experts found that West Germany had the "most extensive and most complete gas centrifuge program in the world at this time" and as long as
their work proceeded on an unclassified basis it could aggravate the "Nth power" problem. For example, the AEC's director of classification worried that an
"unfriendly" country like China might someday acquire the gas centrifuge on the open market [see documents 2 and 6].

To prevent the diversion of gas centrifuge technology into weapons programs, in 1960 the AEC staff recommended safeguards and classification of
technology. Because classification could only limit dissemination of the latest centrifuge advances, safeguards on the export of centrifuges and controls
over uranium trade would be important elements of an international system [see document 6].

AEC and Union Carbide studies recognized that an important technical problem to be solved was how to operate a "cascade" of gas centrifuges so that
they could produce HEU in large quantities. The 1960 Union Carbide study argued that an important element of the time required to develop a gas centrifuge
plant was to "solve the problems encountered when one attempts to connect large numbers of centrifuges together and run them in the series-parallel
arrangement which constitutes the separation cascade."

Union Carbide revised its estimate of the time frame for building a centrifuge plant in 1964, finding that class "X" countries would require 8
years, but 5 years if they had some "technical knowledge" of U.S. developments. Class "Y' countries would need about 9 years, but about 7 years if they had
knowledge of U.S. developments. They would have to import some hardware and equipment. Class "Z" countries could not develop centrifuges on their own, but
with technical advisers, knowledge of U.S. developments, and imported equipment, they could do it in about 9 years [see document 9].

The possibility that gas centrifuges could be used to produce highly enriched uranium became understood early in the 20th century. If uranium was converted into uranium hexafluoride, whichcan become a gas at the right temperature, it could flow through high-speed centrifuges which would separate the lighter and fissionable uranium isotope, U-235, from
the heavier element, U-238, not unlike a cream separator separating cream from milk. During World War II scientists and technicians working for the
Manhattan Project looked closely at the centrifuge option as a way to produce uranium-235 which in turn could be turned into uranium metal for a "gun-type"
nuclear weapon. Yet, project director General Leslie Groves and his advisers shut down the project because the centrifuges could not operate for long
periods of time without breaking down. The Manhattan Project turned to the highly expensive, but more certain, gaseous diffusion method for producing
enriched uranium. [2]

During the following decades, scientists in the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and the Soviet Union found that the gas centrifuge technique
had great potential to produce enriched uranium cheaply, efficiently, and effectively. Documents recently declassified by the Department of Energy shed
light on late 1959-early 1960, when U.S. policymakers, already worried about the spread of nuclear weapons, became aware of the risk posed by the gas
centrifuge. Since 1957, the Central Intelligence Agency had been coordinating the production of National Intelligence Estimates forecasting the
prospects for further proliferation of nuclear capabilities and U.S. intelligence had discovered the existence of theIsraeli nuclear
program. The NIEs found that a world with more nuclear powers would pose difficult and undesirable challenges to U.S. influence in world affairs. In this
context, the proliferation of gas centrifuge technology could aggravate what policy advisers were beginning to characterize as the "Nth" country problem
(that some indeterminate number of countries might develop a nuclear capability).

What contributed to high-level concern about nuclear proliferation via gas centrifuges was not only that such countries as West Germany had a
"lead" in the technology, but that their research and development programs were unclassified. The Germans and the Dutch were developing the technology for
commercial purposes, so they could produce HEU for nuclear power reactors and eventually eliminate their dependence on U.S. supplies. The German and the
Dutch programs, however, were completely uncontrolled at the time and the AEC saw a risk of proliferation if the technology leaked or if high capacity machines became
available for export. Brazil had already purchased a number of machines several years earlier. While the AEC had declassified some findings from its
classified centrifuge program, it was starting to tighten up controls, and concerns mounted that U.S. classification actions would be irrelevant if Dutch
or West German centrifuge technology was unclassified.

AEC officials were also aware that the Soviet Union had a gas centrifuge program which, with the assistance of German prisoners of war, had solved the
technical problems that sidelined the U.S. project during World War II. R. Scott Kemp and Houston Wood's pioneering research shows that U.S. intelligence
learned about a recently-released prisoner, Austrian scientist Gernot Zippe, who had worked on the Soviet centrifuge program under contract. The AEC
brought Zippe to Washington in early 1957 where he gave a full briefing on developments in the Soviets' centrifuge program. What Zippe had helped the
Soviets develop was a short-tube (or short-bowl) centrifuge that was far simpler than anything in progress in the United States or Germany, and which could
operate efficiently, reliably, and without crashing. [3]

In 1958, the AEC recruited Zippe to work at the University of Virginia to reproduce what he had done for the Soviet centrifuge program. Zippe's results in
a small lab in Charlottesville during 1958-1960 were significant evidence of the gas centrifuge's potential. Drawing on the Soviet design, the AEC
underwrote a project by the Union Carbide Nuclear Company to produce a high-speed centrifuge capable of rotating at 450 meters per second and a functioning
cascade of centrifuges. The purpose was not to develop a pilot plant but to determine the project's proliferation and economic implications. According to
Scott Kemp's account, within 15 months the UCNC team of no more than 15 people had "mastered the technical difficulties of the centrifuge," "learned how to
manufacture all components in-house," and "designed, assembled, and operated a centrifuge cascade to an efficiency of 80 percent." [4]

Gas centrifuge technology developed further during the 1960s and 1970s, and began to operate on an industrial scale in the three countries--West Germany,
the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom--which established the URENCO consortium. Such operations remained confined to a handful of countries until the
mid-1970s when Pakistani technologist A. Q. Khan stole blueprints from the Dutch URENCO plant in Amelmo in the mid-1970s. Within a few years, the Pakistani
nuclear establishment had acquired dual-use technology from a number of suppliers that it used to establish a secret uranium enrichment plant at Kahuta.
While the United States and allies attempted to halt or at least slow the Pakistani nuclear program, it was a half-hearted effort because Cold War
priorities precluded a forceful nonproliferation policy. Indeed, during the 1990s, A. Q. Khan disseminated gas enrichment technology to Iran, North
Korea, and possibly India.

Note on Secondary Sources

Much declassified information has become available on the Pakistani case, but more needs to be learned about the role of the gas centrifuge technology in
U.S. policy and international relations. In recent years historians, political scientists, and scientists have expanded knowledge of the history of the gas
centrifuge through archivally-based work. Besides R. Scott Kemp's contributions, historians Stephen Twigge and Susana Schraffstetter have produced
important work on the British centrifuge program in Anglo-American relations and the emergence of the British-Dutch-West German cooperative project that
led to URENCO. Recently, historian of science John Krige has shed further light on the role of the gas centrifuge in Anglo-American nuclear relations
during the 1960s and on the centrifuge in the negotiating record of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. The latter, an article recently published inNonproliferation Review, was one of the winners of the Doreen and Jim McElvany Nonproliferation Challenge Essay Competition. [5]

READ THE DOCUMENTS

Background

Document 1: Central Intelligence Agency Information Report, "The Development of an Ultra-Centrifuge at the Nuclear Institute of Manfred von Ardenne in
Sinop," 10 June 1955, Secret, excised copy

Source: CIA Research Tool (CREST) National Archives, College Park MD

A returned German prisoner of war from the Soviet Union may have been one of the U.S. government's earliest sources on the Soviet gas centrifuge program.
His full name presently unknown, Kaiblinger may have been a highly skilled machinist who could use lathes to produce complex equipment. Apparently working
in the late 1940s at Manfred Von Ardenne's Institute "A" --located in a former sanitorium in Sinop, Georgia [6]--Kaiblinger helped with Max
von Steenbeck's centrifuge project. He did not see much progress; for example, he reported a comment by one of the Germans, Steudel (first name unknown or
"fnu"), that "it could not actually be expected that the centrifuge system would ever be applied on an industrial basis." Kaiblinger provided the U.S. with
detailed information on the institute, including a diagram of a centrifuge and the names of scientific workers, among them "Dr. Gerhard [sic] Zippe, a
"mechanical physicist [who] worked on preliminary experiments of the development of the centrifuge." Despite the slow start, by the 1950s the Soviet
centrifuge process was a highly successful one that, through Zippe's influence, shaped developments in the West.

Document 2: C. L. Marshall, Director, Division of Classification, to A. A. Wells, Director, Division of International Affairs, "Cooperation in the
Field of Gas Centrifuge," 7 December 1959, Secret

The AEC's policy to declassify information on the gas centrifuge had a loophole-information could be classified when the technology "could reasonably be
used for the production of large quantities of U-235." According to C.L. Marshall, the Netherlands and West Germany were making substantive progress in
developing gas centrifuge technology and would eventually be able to build a "working plant for the mass production of U-235." New technology which would
make that possible needed to be classified, he argued, because it would enhance the capabilities of an "unfriendly nation" to produce isotopes. Marshall
pointed to China as one such country, although he was mistaken to argue that gaseous diffusion technology would not be in Chinese hands "for many years to
come." [7] To keep gas centrifuges off the "open
market," Marshall proposed amending classified U.S agreements with the Netherlands and West Germany so that it would be possible for both countries to
cooperate with the United States on the development of gas centrifuge technology on a restricted basis.

Document 3: A.A. Wells, Director, Division of International Affairs, Atomic Energy Commission, to Philip J. Farley, Special Assistant to the Secretary
of State for Disarmament and Atomic Energy, "Control of and Cooperation in Gas Centrifuge Research and Development Program," 19 February 1960, Secret

A.A. ("Algie") Wells developed Marshall's themes in a longer memorandum to the Department of State. Citing a recent study by the General
Electric Co., Wells suggested that it was a matter of time before it was possible to produce U-235 with gas centrifuges at a "cost roughly equivalent to
our published prices" of enriched uranium produced with gaseous diffusion technology. Already the West Germans were "if anything, enjoying a slight lead"
over the United States, but 20-30 other countries had the skills needed to develop the technology. The proliferation risk posed by the gas centrifuge
compared to the "plutonium reactor route" was a "slightly more attractive" method of producing fissile materials. Yet, the Dutch and the German programs
were proceeding on an unclassified basis so "any classification action the Commission might take could be vitiated if the German activities were to proceed
on an unclassified basis."

To "mitigate to some extent" the risk of nuclear proliferation, Wells proposed that the United States negotiate agreements with the Dutch and the Germans
to classify and safeguard gas centrifuge technology. Cooperative research could be helpful by increasing the speed of U.S. progress but would also "enhance
control" by the U.S. of the technology. With the complex diplomatic issues raised by the gas centrifuge, Wells asked the State Department to contribute its
thinking.

This contractor report deeply informed the thinking of AEC officials. Its chief conclusion was that "in general, it would not be too difficult to build a
relatively small clandestine gas centrifuge plant capable of producing sufficient enriched uranium for a small number of nuclear weapons." Industrial
countries would have less trouble building and hiding such facilities but, according to Union Carbide, even a nation with "relatively limited industrial
activity" could use this technology to produce a nuclear weapon in 8 years.

The Union Carbide study suggested that building a clandestine gas centrifuge plant was a difficult task but that a determined country could do it. What
would make the technology attractive to a would-be proliferant was that the centrifuges could be relatively small (less than a foot in diameter) and
mounted vertically, which meant they needed little floor space. A building of "modest dimensions" could contain a small centrifuge plant and it would be
"difficult to detect, especially in an industrial country." Moreover, compared to the expensive gaseous diffusion enrichment process, the centrifuge method
was relatively cheap---four megawatts would be required for the annual operation of a small plant compared with hundreds, perhaps thousands, of megawatts
for a gaseous diffusion plant.

To gauge the proliferation risk, Union Carbide looked at countries at three stages of development. "Class X" highly industrial countries with up-to-date
educational systems, such as Germany or Sweden, would need about 5 years to get to the point where they could produce HEU. Class Y" intermediate countries
with "limited internal industrial activity," such as Israel or Brazil, would require about 6.5 years to reach the point where they could produce nuclear
weapons with the help of gas centrifuges. "Class Z" non-industrial countries with low technological levels, such as Cuba or Egypt, would take about 8
years. They would, however, need the assistance of a "Class X" country and would have difficulty building a completely clandestine plant. "

Those countries that found a way to produce gas centrifuges for a nuclear weapons program would have to solve other technological problems. Producing HEU
for a nuclear weapon would require the creation of a "cascade" of interconnected gas centrifuges and "there has been no indication that anyone has
successfully run even two interconnected centrifuges." This, however, was a problem of "plant design and process control" that could be solved. Moreover, a
high-speed centrifuge required "suitable material" capable of withstanding high velocities. A "class X" country could solve these and other problems within
the stipulated eight years.

Document 5: Atomic Energy Commission, "Preliminary State Views on Gas Centrifuge," 9 April 1960, AEC 610/16, enclosing Philip J. Farley, special
Assistant to the Secretary of State, to Algie A. Wells, Director, Division of International Affairs, Atomic Energy Commission, "Control of and
Cooperation in Gas Centrifuge Research and Development Program," 23 March 1960, Secret

Source: Department of Energy MDR release

The AEC's report to the State Department generated concern over the proliferation risk of unclassified gas centrifuge research, but the Department had no
clear answers. While Philip Farley, the secretary of state's adviser on atomic energy policy, believed that the Dutch and the West Germans might be able to
impose export controls, he thought it might be more difficult to secure West German cooperation to classify the latest developments in the technology. The
Germans were likely to be reluctant to classify because it could "raise suspicions" among their neighbors that they had a nuclear weapons program under
way. An alternative was that the European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom) could request its members to classify the technology but this raised the risk
that the information would become available to the French. So far the US AEC had been unable to "approve the French AEC for security." An alternative to
classification by Euratom or classification by national governments would be "informal commercial restrictions."

The Atomic Energy Commission staff reviewed a number of developments which informed its support for action to classify the gas centrifuge program in the
United States and overseas to mitigate proliferation risks. They took into account Union Carbide's findings and a recent General Electric study, which
found that in five years (including three years of development) the United States could build a gas centrifuge plant which could produce U-235 at prices
competitive with the AEC's current price structure. Other studies showed that the "centrifuge route, as compared with the reactor route … would be
the easier to pursue both covertly and overtly." Moreover, recent developments, including Zippe's work at the University of Virginia, demonstrated the
potential of the gas centrifuge: "the simplicity of [the Zippe group's] presently developed unit, along with materials improvement developed in missile
programs, indicated the feasibility of a short tube unit showing considerable potential for isotope separation." Finally, the fact that the Germans already
had the most complete and most extensive gas centrifuge program in the world at this time" made AEC officials want to prevent widespread dissemination of
their knowledge. Yet, if the Germans and Dutch were resistant to classification, the AEC was willing to consider the possibility of putting its work on a
nonclassified basis.

The AEC study treated classification and the application of safeguards as important to preventing the dissemination of knowledge about the latest
developments, but AEC officials also proposed looking at the possibility of U.S. collaboration with the West Germans and Dutch centrifuge projects.
Although the State Department's reaction to AEC proposals for classification and cooperation was equivocal, the Commission staff was determined to go
forward. One of the recommendations to the AEC General Manager was to hold "exploratory discussions" with the Dutch and West German governments on the
possibility of classifying the latest gas centrifuge technology.

Another recommendation to the General Manager was a new research program on the gas centrifuge. One of the chief concerns was that the United States could
lose "technological leadership" if it did not expand its efforts in gas centrifuge technology. The April 1960 paper showed strong interest in an "expanded
development program" costing $2 million dollars a year. Among the "incentives" for such an approach would be "cheaper incremental production" of HEU and a
beneficial economic impact. Moreover, the AEC would be in a better position to maintain "knowledge of sources and capabilities of foreign production of
fissionable materials." But the AEC's Division of Production favored a smaller project mainly to resolve the "technical and economic uncertainties as to
performance of a group of centrifuges operating as a cascade." In this way it would be possible to make a "proper evaluation of the Nth power problem."
Apparently the Atomic Energy Commission approved something very close to the Production Division's recommendation because the work that the Union Carbide
Nuclear Company began later in the year was close to it. [8]

The Atomic Energy Commission also approved a staff recommendation for talks with the British, Dutch, and West Germans on classification and control issues.
The letter that General Manager Luedecke sent to Farley on 22 April transmitted the AEC's support for the prompt initiation of "exploratory discussions" to
"seek control of gas centrifuge equipment and materials and control of centrifuge technology." The AEC and the State Department could send a team of
officials to Western Europe to hold such talks.

A forthcoming Electronic Briefing Book will explore U.S. government collaboration with the Dutch, Germans, and British during the 1960s to mitigate the
proliferation risk by classifying gas centrifuge technology.

This study extended and refined the 1960 Union Carbide study by taking into account the latest technological developments. Drawing on the results of the
AEC gas enrichment program, it supported the basic conclusion that countries at more advanced stages of industrial development would be able to build a gas
centrifuge plant for producing nuclear weapons on a clandestine basis. Significant information has been excised from this version of the document,
including details on the progress of Union Carbide's successful efforts to produce high-speed gas centrifuges and a functioning cascade. These details are
protected under the Atomic Energy Act's "restricted data" controls. Also heavily excised, to protect foreign government and intelligence information, are
details of overseas centrifuge developments, including in the United Kingdom, West Germany, the Netherlands, as well as the report's conclusions about the
time frames needed for class X, Y, and Z countries to build a gas centrifuge plant. A summary prepared in 1965 for the White House, reproduces the key
conclusions (see document 9). Nevertheless, the release includes interesting information, such as the discussion of the considerations that could lead
countries at various stages of industrial development to choose between plutonium-reactor and gas centrifuge routes for acquiring a nuclear weapons
capability.

In this letter, Seaborg retransmitted the 1964 Union Carbide Nuclear Division study on gas centrifuges and the "Nth Power" problem, while bringing up
additional points. He described the AEC's recent efforts to tighten controls over the dissemination of gas centrifuge technology, the latest development
being to restrict access to the AEC's latest data to private industry. While understandings with the Netherlands and West Germany to keep gas centrifuge
technology classified remained in place, the Germans strongly opposed U.S. proposals to formalize them, probably so that they could retain their freedom of
action.

The summary of the 1964 Union Carbide Nuclear Company study includes information that the Department of Energy withheld in its recent release of the full
study (see document 8 above). The key withholding concerns the estimates of the time frames needed for class X, Y, and Z countries to build gas centrifuge
plants on a clandestine basis. As in the 1960 study, class X countries were those in an advanced state of industrial and educational development, such as
Sweden, Japan, and West Germany; class Y countries had more "limited" development, such as Brazil, India, and Israel, while class Z countries had "little
technological" or industrial "skill", such as Egypt, Peru, or Pakistan. According to the estimate, to develop a small plant capable of producing enough
U-235 for a nuclear weapon, class X countries would require 8 years, but 5 years if they had some "technical knowledge" of U.S. developments. Class Y
countries would need about 9 years, but about 7 years if they had knowledge of U.S. developments. They would have to import some hardware and equipment.
Class Z countries could not develop centrifuges on their own, but if they had technical advisers, knowledge of U.S. developments, and imported equipment,
they would need about 9 years. Physically concealing the plants "should present no problem." The velocities at which U.S. centrifuges could operate, which
presumably could serve as a goal for other countries, was excised by DOE.

NOTES

[1] . For an early report on the discovery of the Iranian gas centrifuge program and what U.S. intelligence learned about it during the 1990s, see
David Albright and Corey Hinderstein, "The Centrifuge Connection," The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, March/April 2004, 51-66. For an
overview, see Houston G. Wood, Alexander Glaser, and R. Scott Kemp,"
The Gas Centrifuge and Nuclear Weapons Proliferation
," Physics Today 61 (2008): 40-45.

[2]
. For useful background, see R. Scott Kemp, "The End of Manhattan: How the Gas Centrifuge Changed the Quest for Nuclear Weapons," Technology and Culture 53 (2012): 276-279.

[3] . Ibid., 279-297. For background on Zippe, see also presentation by Houston Wood, University of Virginia, at Woodrow Wilson Center for
International Scholars, 20 January 2010.

[5]
. Kemp, "The End of Manhattan"; Stephen Twigge, "A Baffling Experience: Technology Transfer, Anglo-American Nuclear Relations, and the Development
of the Gas Centrifuge 1964-1970," History and Technology: An International Journal19 (2003): 151-163; Susana
Schrafstetter and Stephen Twigge, "Spinning into Europe: Britain, West-Germany, the Netherlands and the Uranium Gas-Centrifuge 1964-70", Contemporary European History, 11 (2002): 253-272; John Krige, "Hybrid Knowledge: The Transnational Co-production of the Gas Centrifuge
for the Enrichment of Uranium in the 1960s,"British Society for the History of Science (2012): 1-21 [presently available online only]; and John Krige, "The Proliferation
Risks of Gas Centrifuge Enrichment at the Dawn of the NPT: Shedding Light on the Negotiating History," Nonproliferation Review 19 (2012):
219-227. Also instructive are entries in Alex Wellerstein's Restricted Data: The Nuclear Secrecy Blog

[6]
. For a useful account of the German role in the early Soviet nuclear program, see Pavel V. Oleynikov, "German Scientists in the Soviet Atomic
Project," Nonproliferation Review 7 (2000), especially pages 11-12 and 22-23.

[7]
. China had already begun construction of the gaseous diffusion plant at Lanzhou, which was completed in 1963; see John Wilson Lewis and Xue Litai, China Builds the Bomb (Stanford CA: Stanford University Press, 1988), 113-125.